4.5/5
Ken Loach’s Sorry We Missed You is another fiery, angry film from the master of working-class British realism and an essential look at the ways modern capitalism dehumanizes the individual while pretending to be giving us more choice and greater flexibility. This time it’s the gig economy and contract work that call under Loach’s carefully researched microscope, and the film takes care to show how the options for regular, full-time employment have become more and more limited, pushing more workers into jobs with no protections, no benefits, no time off, and the illusory promise of “flexibility” that really mean lost wages and fines. The film’s rhythms are intentionally suffocating, barely giving us a moment to breathe before the narrative hurtles us to the next task, the next delivery, the next job, without a moment’s respite, leaving us as emotionally exhausted as the characters. And the film is carefully structured to show us the toll this type of work takes, not just on the individual, but on the family as well. It’s an angry, urgent film that cries out for better protections and safeguards for everyone forced into gig employment, demanding better from those in power.
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Author: Josh Hornbeck
Josh is the founder of Cinema Cocktail, and he is a writer and director, podcaster and critic, and communications and marketing professional living and working in the greater Seattle area. View all posts by Josh Hornbeck